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20<strong>16</strong><br />
<strong>PBRN</strong><br />
PRACTICE-BASED<br />
RESEARCH NETWORK<br />
CONFERENCE<br />
July 11-12, 20<strong>16</strong> | Hyatt Bethesda<br />
Bethesda, Maryland<br />
OFFICIAL PROGRAM
Welcome<br />
Dear Colleagues,<br />
Greetings! On behalf of the North American Primary Care Research<br />
Group, welcome to the Practice-based Research Network<br />
Conference. Thank you to the Agency for Healthcare Research<br />
and Quality that has supported this conference with a generous<br />
conference grant.<br />
We are pleased to see <strong>PBRN</strong> researchers coming together to<br />
share strategies, methods, and results. The Planning Committee<br />
has produced an excellent agenda to include <strong>PBRN</strong> innovations<br />
and research projects on diverse topics of interest to community<br />
clinicians, practice facilitators/study coordinators, and network<br />
leadership.<br />
This year’s plenaries focus on “Dissemination and Implementation:<br />
Ensuring <strong>PBRN</strong> (and Patient Centered Outcomes) Research<br />
Evidence is Understood and Used”. You are almost guaranteed to<br />
hear something new while you are here. Conference presentations<br />
include the full range of issues related to practice-based research,<br />
including sessions on these and other “hot topic” areas:<br />
• <strong>PBRN</strong> Infrastructure/Operations<br />
• Stakeholder Engagement<br />
• Proposal Development/Study Design/Analytic Methods<br />
• Study Recruitment and Implementation<br />
• Dissemination of Results or Intervention at Study Completion<br />
• Funding/Research Priorities<br />
The conference is an opportunity to network with and learn from over<br />
200 <strong>PBRN</strong>ers from Canada and the United States. We hope you find<br />
this conference instructive, inspiring, and enjoyable. Please help us<br />
make it even better next year by sharing with us your evaluations and<br />
ideas.<br />
Welcome to Bethesda!<br />
Conference Planning Committee<br />
Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS<br />
Director, Duke Primary Care Research Consortium<br />
Durham, NC<br />
Lyle (LJ) Fagnan, MD<br />
Director, ORPRN<br />
Portland, OR<br />
Milton “Mickey” Eder, PhD<br />
Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota<br />
Minneapolis, MN<br />
Michelle Greiver MD, MSc, CCFP, FCFP<br />
North York Family Health Team<br />
Toronto, Ontario<br />
David Hahn, MD<br />
Director, Wisconsin Research & Education Network<br />
Madison, WI<br />
Jeffrey A. Linder, MD, MPH, FACP<br />
Director, Brigham and Women’s Primary Care<br />
Practice-Based Research Network<br />
Boston, MA<br />
Marie-Thérèse Lussier MD, BSc, MSc, FCMFC<br />
Associate Professor, University of Montreal<br />
Laval, Quebec<br />
Anne Victoria Neale, PhD, MPH<br />
Professor, Wayne State University School of<br />
Medicine<br />
Detroit, MI<br />
Donald E. Nease, Jr., MD<br />
Associate Director, Practice Based Research<br />
Network Collaborative, University of Colorado-<br />
Denver<br />
Aurora, CO<br />
Rebecca A. Roper, MS, MPH<br />
Director, Practice-Based Research Network Initiative<br />
Agency Healthcare Research Quality (AHRQ)<br />
Bethesda, MD<br />
Hazel Tapp, PhD<br />
Director of Research, Carolinas Healthcare System<br />
Charlotte, NC<br />
Denise Campbell-Scherer, MD, PhD, CCFP, FCFP<br />
Associate Professor, Department of Family<br />
Medicine, University of Alberta<br />
Edmonton, AB<br />
Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS<br />
Conference Co-Chair<br />
Lyle (LJ) Fagnan, MD<br />
Conference Co-Chair<br />
Richard Wasserman, MD<br />
Professor of Pediatrics, University of Vermont<br />
Burlington, VT<br />
John (Jack) Westfall, MD, MPH<br />
Senior Scholar, Eugene S Farley Jr. Health Policy<br />
Center, University of Colorado-Denver<br />
Denver, CO<br />
David White, MD<br />
Associate Professor, University of Toronto<br />
Toronto, ON<br />
Consuelo Hopkins Wilkins, MD, MSCI<br />
Director, Meharry/Vanderbilt Alliance<br />
Nashville, TN
Schedule at a Glance<br />
Monday, July 11<br />
6:30 am–6:00 pm Registration<br />
Tuesday, July 12<br />
7:00 am–3:00 pm Registration<br />
7:30–8:15 am Continental Breakfast &<br />
Special Interest Group Networking<br />
7:30–8:15 am Continental Breakfast &<br />
Special Interest Group Networking<br />
8:15–8:45 am Welcome Remarks<br />
Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS<br />
Lyle (LJ) Fagnan, MD<br />
Rebecca Roper, MS, MPH<br />
8:15–9:15 am Oral Presentations<br />
9:15–9:30 am Transitional Break<br />
8:45-9:45 am Plenary I<br />
Getting to ‘Better’ in Ontario’s<br />
Primary Care System<br />
Joshua Tepper, MD, MPH, MBA<br />
9:45–10:00 am Transitional Break<br />
10:00–11:00 am Workshops/Panels/Forums<br />
11:00–11:15 am Transitional Break<br />
11:15–12:15 pm Oral Presentations<br />
12:15–12:45 pm Networking Lunch<br />
12:45–1:45 pm Plenary II<br />
Partnering with Patients, Families<br />
and Communities: Learning from<br />
Lived Experiences to Improve<br />
Primary Healthcare<br />
Antoine Boivin, MD, MSc, PhD<br />
Vincent Dumez, MSc<br />
9:30–10:30 am Poster Session II &<br />
Refreshment Break<br />
10:30–10:45 am Transitional Break<br />
10:45 am–12:15 pm Workshops/Panels/Forums<br />
12:15–1:00 pm Networking Luncheon<br />
1:00–2:00 pm Plenary III<br />
AHRQ’s EvidenceNOW: Implementation<br />
at the Intersection of Quality Improvement<br />
and Research<br />
David Meyers, MD<br />
2:00-2:30 pm Special Presentation:<br />
Daring & Dangerous Ideas<br />
2:30–3:00 pm Awards & Closing Announcements<br />
3:00 pm Adjournment<br />
1:45–2:00 pm Transitional Break<br />
2:00–3:00 pm Oral Presentations<br />
3:00–3:15 pm Transitional Break<br />
3:15–4:45 pm Workshops/Panels/Forums<br />
4:45–5:00 pm Transitional Break<br />
5:00–6:00 pm Poster Session I &<br />
Evening Reception<br />
6:00 pm Dine Around Groups<br />
2
Monday, July 11<br />
JULY 11, 20<strong>16</strong><br />
Registration u<br />
6:30 am-6:00 pm<br />
Workshops/Panels/Forums u<br />
10:00-11:00 am<br />
Continental Breakfast and Special Interest<br />
Group Networking u 7:30-8:15 am<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
Special Interest Group networking provides free-form<br />
discussions on various topics in a casual format. Feel free to<br />
join any topic or start a table of your own!<br />
Welcome Remarks u<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
8:15-8:45 am<br />
Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS, Conference Co-Chair<br />
Lyle (LJ) Fagnan, MD, Conference Co-Chair<br />
Rebecca Roper, MS, MPH, Director, Practice-Based Research<br />
Network Initiative, Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality<br />
Plenary I u 8:45-9:45 am<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
Getting to ‘Better’ in Ontario’s Primary Care System<br />
Ontario is a very large geographic mass (almost twice the size<br />
of France) boasting both highly urban and rural remote<br />
settings. Providing primary care to the roughly 13.5M citizens<br />
of the province includes a workforce of more than 9,000 family<br />
doctors, 1,000 nurse practitioners and thousands of other<br />
healthcare providers working in highly varied practice models.<br />
Health Quality Ontario in partnership with others has been<br />
working to support quality improvement in Ontario’s primary<br />
care system.<br />
The presentation will focus on six key initiatives, quality<br />
improvement plans, patient engagement, provider level<br />
reporting, public reporting, skill development and support of<br />
clinical leadership.<br />
Learning Objectives:<br />
• To understand Ontario Canada’s Framework for quality<br />
and its application to primary care<br />
• To look at the role of large scale data and reporting<br />
efforts in primary care<br />
• To learn about the Quality Improvement Plans<br />
and capacity building in quality improvement to help<br />
improve care and modify unwanted variation.<br />
Joshua Tepper, MD, MPH, MBA<br />
President and Chief Executive Officer<br />
Health Quality Ontario<br />
PROPOSAL DEVELOPMENT/STUDY DESIGN/<br />
ANALYTIC METHODS<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
WPF10: Making Composite Measures of Quality Useful for<br />
Front-line Primary Care Providers<br />
Join your fellow front line primary care workers, patients and<br />
researchers to consider questions like:<br />
• Who could and should decide how the composite<br />
indicator is designed in terms of scope of coverage,<br />
data sources, number and relative importance of<br />
indicators, etc?<br />
• What specifically would make composite measures<br />
easier for front line providers to use in their efforts to<br />
improve primary care?<br />
• Do the advantages of composite measures really<br />
outweigh the challenges?<br />
Carol Mulder, DVM, MSc, CUTL, DBA (cand);<br />
Frank Sullivan, PhD, MRCGP, FRCGP, MRCP, FRCP, MB;<br />
Anna Greenberg, BA, MPP<br />
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
WPF12: Collaboration Between Primary Care and Public<br />
Health: Current State, Future Potential<br />
This session will share research findings about how primary<br />
care and public health collaborate, elicit the attendees’<br />
perspectives about such collaboration now and in the future,<br />
and discuss an emerging model that can support integration of<br />
primary care and public health at a local level.<br />
Laura-Mae Baldwin, MD, MPH; David L. Hahn, MD, MS;<br />
Donald E. Nease, Jr., MD<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> INFRASTRUCTURE/NETWORK OPERATIONS<br />
Room: Old Georgetown<br />
WPF13: Models and Frameworks: Grounding<br />
Implementation and Dissemination Research in<br />
Theoretical Approaches<br />
There is an increased interest in using theoretical approaches<br />
in implementation and dissemination research to guide data<br />
collection and to better understand why and how<br />
implementation outcomes came about. This interactive<br />
workshop will shine light on models, frameworks, and theories<br />
and their different aims and uses. We will discuss examples<br />
and share experiences from our work. Together with<br />
participants we will reflect on the applicability and utility of<br />
different frameworks.<br />
3<br />
Transitional Break u<br />
9:45-10:00 am<br />
Denise L Campbell-Scherer, MD, PhD; Thea Luig, PhD
Transitional Break u<br />
11:00-11:15 am<br />
Oral Presentations u<br />
11:15 am-12:15 pm<br />
CHRONIC CARE MANAGEMENT<br />
Room: Old Georgetown<br />
OP1: Baseline Data for the TRANSLATE CKD Study<br />
Chester H. Fox, MD; Wilson Pace, MD; Miriam Dickinson, PhD<br />
OP2: Genetic Variation Associated with Blood Pressure<br />
Change Among a Cohort of African American Adults in the<br />
Heart Healthy Lenoir Trial<br />
Jacqueline R. Halladay, MD, MPH; Jonathan C. Schisler, MS,<br />
PhD; Kaitlin Lenhart<br />
OP3: The Community Research Outreach <strong>Program</strong>:<br />
Integrating Research Engagement into Operations<br />
Perry Foley, MPH, MSW; Nathaniel T. Warren, MPH;<br />
Jennifer DeVoe, MD, DPhil<br />
OP4: The Effect of Quality Improvement Orientation and<br />
Organizational Change on Cardiovascular Care in Oklahoma<br />
Primary Care Practices: A First Look<br />
Ann F Chou, PhD, MPH; Juell Homco, MS; Julie Stoner, PhD<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> INFRASTRUCTURE/NETWORK OPERATIONS<br />
Room: Congressional<br />
OP5: Clinical Trials Redesigned: A Novel Approach to <strong>PBRN</strong><br />
Integration<br />
Lindsay Shade, MHS, PA-C; Lindsay Lowe, BS; Shane Gavin, BS<br />
OP6: Development of a <strong>PBRN</strong> Action Group for Canada<br />
Michelle Greiver, MD, MSc, CCFP, FCFP;<br />
Frank Sullivan, MD, PhD; Deirdre Snelgrove<br />
OP7: Impact on Practice-based Research Networks of<br />
Partnerships with Clinical and Translational Science Awards<br />
- Results from the CERA <strong>PBRN</strong> Directors Survey<br />
Allison Cole, MD, MPH; Treah Haggerty, MD;<br />
Arch G. Mainous III, PhD<br />
OP8: Knowledge to Action or Action to Knowledge? - The<br />
Application of the KTA Framework to Knowledge and<br />
Research Use in Primary Care<br />
Tina Wulff<br />
PRACTICE FACILITATION/QUALITY IMPROVEMENT<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
OP9: Developing Practice Facilitation Infrastructure for a<br />
Large Health Plan in California to Support Quality and<br />
Evidence Translation<br />
Lyndee Knox, PhD; Ellen Rudy, PhD<br />
OP10: Impact of a Ground-Up Voluntary Performance<br />
Measurement Initiative on the Use of Data for QI in Primary<br />
Care<br />
Carol Mulder, DVM, MSc, CUTL, DBA (cand);<br />
Rick Glazier, MD, MPH<br />
OP11: Implementing a Remotely Facilitated Project -<br />
Challenges and Opportunities<br />
Kris Neuhaus, MD, MPH; Victoria Hall, RN, MPH;<br />
Emily Bullard, MPH<br />
OP12: Practice-based Research Networks Add Value to<br />
Evidence-Based Quality Improvement<br />
Karen M. Goldstein, MD, MSPH; Dawne Vogt, PhD;<br />
Alison Hamilton, PhD<br />
TRAINING<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
OP13: A Training and Support Curriculum for Engaging<br />
Patients as Partners Across Ambulatory Primary Care<br />
Practices<br />
Aimee English, MD; Maret Felzien, MA; Don Nease, MD<br />
OP14: Implementing Training in a Practice Based Research<br />
Network: An Expert Panel “Makes the Medicine (Training) Go<br />
Down”<br />
Ellen F. Yee, MD, MPH; Susan M. Frayne, MD, MPH;<br />
Diane V. Carney, MA<br />
OP15: Teaching Motivational Interviewing Skills to Primary<br />
Care Physicians & Staff: Lessons Learned<br />
Walter L. Calmbach, MD, MPH; Mary Marden Velasquez, PhD<br />
OP<strong>16</strong>: The Certificate <strong>Program</strong> in Practice-based Research<br />
Methods: A Collaboration of <strong>PBRN</strong> Centers to Develop a New<br />
Generation of Investigators<br />
James J. Werner, PhD; LJ Fagnan, MD<br />
4
Monday, July 11<br />
JULY 11, 20<strong>16</strong><br />
Networking Luncheon u<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
12:15-12:45 pm<br />
Plenary II u 12:45-1:45 pm<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
Partnering with Patients, Families and Communities:<br />
Learning from Lived Experiences to Improve Primary<br />
Healthcare<br />
Patients, families, and community members are increasingly<br />
recognized as primary caregivers, providing the majority of<br />
direct care for chronic conditions and minor acute conditions.<br />
Despite considerable evidence of the benefits of patient and<br />
professional partnerships, building effective collaborations<br />
between primary healthcare professionals, patients, families,<br />
and community members remains a challenge in practice. This<br />
presentation aims at illustrating real-world examples of patient<br />
and professional partnerships, and discuss key ingredients for<br />
successful implementation at the clinical, organizational and<br />
policy levels.<br />
Learning Objectives:<br />
• Understand the challenges of patient partnership in<br />
primary healthcare<br />
• Understand the different levels of engagement in<br />
primary healthcare<br />
• Discuss implementation strategies in primary healthcare<br />
Antoine Boivin, MD, MSc, PhD<br />
Family Physician & Health Services<br />
Researcher, Department of Family Medicine,<br />
Research Center Hospital of the University<br />
of Montreal (CHUM Research Centre)<br />
Scientific Director, Partnership Lab<br />
Vincent Dumez, MSc<br />
Co-Director, Office of Collaboration and<br />
Patient Partnership, Faculty of Medicine,<br />
University of Montreal<br />
Transitional Break u 1:45-2:00 pm<br />
Oral Presentations u<br />
DISSEMINATION/IMPLEMENTATION<br />
Room: Congressional<br />
2:00-3:00 pm<br />
OP17: Effects of a Multi-Faceted Intervention to Improve<br />
Care Transitions Within a Pioneer Accountable Care<br />
Organization<br />
Jeffrey L. Schnipper, MD, MPH, FHM<br />
OP18: Family Physician and Registered Dietitian Attitudes<br />
on Use of Social Media for Guideline Dissemination<br />
Rosa Hand, MS, RDN, LD, FAND; Deric Kenne, PhD;<br />
Taylor Wolfram, MS, RDN, LD<br />
OP19: Ontario Data Support Starfield’s Theory on Practice<br />
Quality and Cost<br />
Carol Mulder, DVM, MSc, CUTL, DBA (cand);<br />
Rick Glazier, MD, MPH; Frank Sullivan, PhD, MD<br />
OP20: Soliciting Clinician Input to Develop and Refine the<br />
“Decision to Implement” Tool<br />
Allison Cole, MD, MPH; Leah Tuzzio;<br />
Michael Parchman, MD, MPH<br />
PEDIATRICS/CHRONIC CARE<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
OP21: Obesity and Adolescent Pregnancy: Building a<br />
De-identified Electronic Clinical Database to Examine the<br />
Biological and Social Determinants of Nutritional Status,<br />
Pregnancy and Birth Outcomes<br />
Jonathan N. Tobin, PhD; Caroline S. Jiang;<br />
Mireille McLean, MPH<br />
OP22: Patient Centered Approach to Identifying Provider<br />
and Patient Level Barriers to Care for Sickle Cell Disease:<br />
A Qualitative Study<br />
Sangeetha Lakshmanan, MSW, MPH, CHES;<br />
Brisa Hernandez, BUS; Shirley Miller, MA<br />
OP23: Relationship Between Mothers’ Social Determinants<br />
of Health and Their Children’s Use of Healthcare Services<br />
Gregory M. Eberhart MD; John M. Pascoe MD, MPH<br />
5<br />
OP24: Strategies for Complex Intervention Implementation<br />
in Primary Care: The Interactive Process Framework and<br />
the 5As Team Obesity Study<br />
Thea Luig, PhD; Arya M Sharma, MD/PhD, DSc. (hc), FRCPC;<br />
Denise L. Campbell-Scherer, MD, PhD, FCFP
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
Transitional/Break u<br />
3:00-3:15 pm<br />
OP25: Engaging Patients and Clinicians in the<br />
Development of Instruments for Primary Care Practice<br />
Utilizing Boot Camp Translation<br />
Matthew Simpson, MD, MPH; Linda Zittleman, MSPH;<br />
Donald Nease Jr., MD<br />
OP26: Incorporating Patient and Community Voices into<br />
Primary Healthcare Research: A PCORI Methods Study<br />
Zsolt Nagykaldi, PhD; Barbara Norton, DrPH;<br />
Lyndee Knox, PhD; Laurene Tumiel Berhalter, PhD<br />
OP27: Patient-Practice-Public Health Partnerships for<br />
Primary Care Practice Improvement in Cardiovascular<br />
Health: Results from Four Boot Camp Translations for<br />
EvidenceNOW Southwest<br />
Linda Zittleman, MSPH; John Westfall, MD, MPH;<br />
Donald Nease Jr., MD<br />
OP28: Sharing and Contextualizing the Experiences of Six<br />
Practice and Community Based Research Advisory Boards<br />
Supporting Research in an Academic Medical Center<br />
Jacqueline R. Halladay, MD, MPH;<br />
Katrina E. Donahue, MD, PhD; Betsy L. Sleath, PhD<br />
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH<br />
Room: Old Georgetown<br />
OP29: Breaking Boundaries: Multi-Agency Collaborative<br />
Care for Primary Care, Mental Health and Addiction in an<br />
Underserved Rural Population<br />
Nicole Gastala, MD; Barcey Levy, MD, PhD;<br />
Andrea Storjohann, RN<br />
OP30: Improving Pain Care through Implementation of the<br />
Stepped Care Model at a Multisite Community Health<br />
Center<br />
Daren Anderson, MD; Ianita Zlateva, MPH; Khushbu Khatri<br />
OP31: Promoting Integration of Behavioral Health<br />
Technology in Primary Care: Perspectives of Primary Care<br />
Clinicians and Staff<br />
Sarah Lord, PhD; Deborah Johnson, MHA; Ardis Olson, MD<br />
OP32: What is Useful in Usual Care? Provider and<br />
Consumer Perspectives on Mental Health Services<br />
Erin Kelly, PhD; John Brekke, PhD; Lisa Davis<br />
DINE AROUND GROUPS TONIGHT!<br />
Don’t miss out on a casual dining experience<br />
with fellow conference attendees who want to<br />
enjoy a nice meal and interesting conversation.<br />
Stop by the registration desk to sign up!<br />
Workshops/Panels/Forums u<br />
PROPOSAL DEVELOPMENT/STUDY DESIGN/<br />
ANALYTIC METHODS<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
3:15-4:45 pm<br />
WPF14: Survey Methods in Practice-based Research<br />
Networks: Tailoring Best Practices to the Survey and Your<br />
Network<br />
This workshop will identify best practices in survey methods for<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong>s, engage participants in discussing challenges to issues<br />
such as survey feasibility and generalizability, and provide<br />
training in building and administering surveys using online<br />
tools.<br />
Laura-Mae Baldwin, MD, MPH; Jacqueline Halladay, MD,<br />
MPH; Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS<br />
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
WPF<strong>16</strong>: <strong>PBRN</strong> to CBRN: Creating a Community of Solution<br />
for Healthcare Transformation in Jackson, Michigan<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong>s have proven value in carrying out translational<br />
research; the next step forward will be addressing the broader<br />
community context in which healthcare occurs. This Forum<br />
describes the evolution of a Community-Based Research<br />
Network (‘CBRN’) formed to address this community context.<br />
Presenters will describe steps taken by GRIN, its ‘parent’ CTSI,<br />
and the Jackson community to create a Community of Solution,<br />
and its current work in behavioral health integration and clinical<br />
transformation.<br />
Michael Klinkman, MD, MS; Leslie Paulson, MSW; Elizabeth<br />
Kaziunas, MS<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> INFRASTRUCTURE/NETWORK OPERATIONS<br />
Room: Old Georgetown<br />
WPF17: Virtual Facilitation: Why, When, How?<br />
Participants in this hands-on session will be provided with<br />
assessment tools with which to develop a remotely-facilitated<br />
project. The session will finish with an interactive discussion<br />
and feedback from experienced virtual facilitators.<br />
Kris Neuhaus MD, MPH; Victoria Hall RN, MPH;<br />
Emily Bullard, MPH<br />
6
Monday, July 11<br />
JULY 11, 20<strong>16</strong><br />
7<br />
Poster Session I &<br />
Evening Reception u<br />
Chesapeake Suite<br />
5:00-6:00 pm<br />
P10: A Practice-based Randomized Trial of Integrating<br />
Behavioral Health and Primary Care for Comorbid<br />
Behavioral and Medical Problems<br />
Constance van Eeghen, DrPH; Benjamin Littenberg, MD;<br />
Rodger Kessler, PhD, ABPP<br />
P11: Adapting the 5As Model to Engage Clinicians<br />
and Patients in Improving Blood Pressure Control<br />
Jennifer Carroll, MD, MPH; Kevin Fiscella, MD, MPH;<br />
Jonathan N. Tobin, PhD<br />
P12: Children’s Age, Family Conflict and Children’s<br />
HbA1c: Are Girls and Boys Different?<br />
Miryoung Lee, PhD; John M. Pascoe, MD, MPH;<br />
Paul Breyer, MD<br />
P13: Children’s Behavioral Health in Primary Care:<br />
Do Parents Always Share Their Concerns<br />
Gregory M. Eberhart MD; Richard Rapp, PhD;<br />
John M. Pascoe MD, MPH<br />
P14: Co-Researching Successful Chronic Pain<br />
Management Techniques using an Appreciative<br />
Inquiry-Boot Camp Translation (AI-BCT) Process<br />
Mary Wold, MPH; Jodi Holtrop, PhD, MCHES;<br />
Donald Nease Jr., MD<br />
P15: Design and Implementation of the Women’s<br />
Enhanced Recruitment Process (WERP) of the VA<br />
Women’s Health Practice-based Research Network<br />
(WH-<strong>PBRN</strong>)<br />
Alyssa Pomernacki, MPH; Diane Carney, MA;<br />
Susan M. Frayne, MD, MPH<br />
P<strong>16</strong>: Expanding the VA Women’s Health Practice Based<br />
Research Network: Increasing Capacity for Equitable<br />
Representation of Women in VA Research<br />
Diane V. Carney, MA; Susan M. Frayne, MD, MPH;<br />
Ruth Klap, PhD<br />
P17: Eastern Oregon Care Coordination Project:<br />
Developing and Piloting the Care Coordination<br />
Measurement Tool for Primary Care<br />
Maggie McLain McDonnell, MPH;<br />
Elizabeth Needham Waddell, PhD<br />
P18: Evaluation of a One-time In-person Training to<br />
Improve Knowledge and Self-reported Implementation of<br />
an Evidence-based Practice Guideline<br />
Rosa Hand, MS, RDN, LD, FAND; Jenica Abram, MPH, RDN<br />
P19: Evolution of a Practice-based Research Network<br />
(<strong>PBRN</strong>): Coordinator’s Reflections on Clinicians’ Informal<br />
Research Training through Engagement in Participatory<br />
Research<br />
Justin Gagnon, MA; Tamara Carver; Vera Granikov<br />
P21: Feasibility of Adolescent Eating Disorder and Obesity<br />
Prevention in a U.S. Military Primary Care Treatment<br />
Facility<br />
Natasha L. Burke, PhD; Mark Stephens, MD;<br />
Marian Tanofsky-Kraff, PhD<br />
P22: Health Literacy and Frequency of Home Blood<br />
Glucose Monitoring Among Patients with Non-Insulin<br />
Treated Type 2 Diabetes<br />
Laura Young, MD, PhD; C. Madeline Mitchell;<br />
Katrina Donahue, MD, MPH<br />
P23: Impact of Adopting PCMH on Teamwork, Patient<br />
Access and Safety<br />
Niharika Khanna, MD; Fadia Shaya, PhD; Priyanka Gaitonde<br />
P24: Large Scale Practice Transformation: The Cost<br />
of Practice Recruitment, the Healthy Hearts<br />
Northwest Experience<br />
Lyle J. Fagnan, MD; Caitlin Dickinson; Katrina Murphy<br />
P25: Meetings for Patient/Users, Clinicians and<br />
Researchers to Improve Primary Care Research<br />
Joyce Dogba, PhD; Isabelle Samson, MD;<br />
Matthew Menear, PhD<br />
P26: Metabolic Outcomes After Bariatric Surgery in a<br />
Community Health Center<br />
Ana B. Emiliano, MD, MS; Rabih Nemr, MD, FACS;<br />
Caroline S. Jiang, MS<br />
P27: Mitigating Dual Risk: An NP-<strong>PBRN</strong> Collaboration in a<br />
Diabetes Management and Tobacco Cessation State<br />
Initiative<br />
Andrea F. Rodgers Fischl, PhD, MPH;<br />
Betty Braxter, PhD, CNM; Jennifer Dickson-Keith, MPH<br />
P28: <strong>PBRN</strong> Studies: Experiences, Priorities, Successes,<br />
and Challenges Regarding the <strong>PBRN</strong> Research Focus<br />
Jeanette Waxmonsky, PhD; Jennifer K. Carroll, MD, MPH;<br />
Jodi Holtrop, PhD<br />
P29: Project Facilitation in Primary Care<br />
Rabiya Siddiqui, BSc; Saddaf Syed, BSc OCT PGCEhD;<br />
Ivanka Pribramska, PhD<br />
P30: Does Facilitated Implementation of Shared Decision<br />
Making Improve Health Outcomes for Asthma Patients?<br />
Preliminary Results from a Statewide RCT for an Asthma<br />
Dissemination Intervention.<br />
Thomas Ludden, PhD; Yhenneko J. Taylor, PhD;<br />
Hazel Tapp, PhD<br />
Dine Around Groups u<br />
6:00 pm<br />
Enjoy a mouthwatering meal at one of Bethesda’s great<br />
restaurants. Whether you’re traveling alone, a first-time<br />
attendee, or just looking for a great meal, join a dine around!<br />
The reservations are filled on a seat-by-seat basis to offer<br />
automatic dinner plans, networking, and great food all in one.<br />
Attendees are responsible for their own meal costs.
Tuesday, July 12<br />
Registration u<br />
7:00 am-3:00 pm<br />
COMMUNITY ENGAGED RESEARCH<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
Continental Breakfast and Special Interest<br />
Group Networking u 7:30-8:15 am<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
The SIGs are a time-tested favorite of NAPCRG meeting<br />
attendees. The format of Special Interest Group Networking<br />
provides free-form discussions on various topics in a casual<br />
format. Feel free to join any topic or start a table of your own!<br />
OP37: An Innovative Community-Based Model for<br />
Improving Preventive Care in Rural Counties<br />
Zsolt Nagykaldi, PhD; Dewey Scheid, MD; Daniel Zhao, PhD<br />
OP38: Creating a Learning Community to Reduce Cancer<br />
Screening Disparities in a Healthcare Network: One<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong>s’ Experience<br />
Brian Stello, MD; Melanie B. Johnson, MPA;<br />
Ronald Myers, PhD<br />
OP39: Engaging Scientists, Clinicians, Community Health<br />
Workers and Patients to Conduct a Comparative<br />
Effectiveness Study of Home-Based Interventions to<br />
Reduce CA-MRSA Recurrence and Household<br />
Transmission<br />
Brianna D’Orazio; Rhonda G. Kost, MD;<br />
Chamanara Khalida, MD, MPH<br />
OP40: Neighborhood Safety and Obesity in Middle-aged<br />
and Older Community-dwelling Adults<br />
Samuel N. Forjuoh, MD, MPH, DrPH;<br />
Marcia G. Ory, PhD, MPH; Jaewoong Won<br />
Oral Presentations u<br />
CHRONIC CARE MANAGEMENT<br />
Room: Congressional<br />
8:15-9:15 am<br />
OP33: Advance Care Planning in Primary Care: An<br />
Exploratory Pilot Study<br />
Jalila Jbilou, MD, PhD<br />
OP34: Race-Specific Patterns of Treatment Intensification<br />
among Hypertensive Patients using Home BP Monitoring:<br />
Results from the Heart Healthy Lenoir Study<br />
Doyle M. Cummings, PharmD; Alyssa Adams, MPH;<br />
Jacquie Halladay, MD, MPH<br />
OP35: The Fit4Duty <strong>Program</strong>: A Dissonance Based,<br />
Participant-Driven Approach to Weight Gain Prevention for<br />
Service Members<br />
Douglas Maurer, DO; Dawn Bates, MA; Tracy Sbrocco, PhD<br />
OP36: Understanding Patient Experiences of Care<br />
Coordination in Primary Care: Development and Testing<br />
of a Comprehensive Care Coordination Measure<br />
Susan K.R. Heil, PhD; San Keller, PhD;<br />
Janice Genevro, PhD<br />
SHARED DECISION MAKING<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
OP41: Developing a Road Map for Optimum Patient-<br />
Partnered Chronic Condition Management<br />
Regina M. Vidaver, PhD; Amanda E. Hoffmann, MPH;<br />
David L. Hahn, MD, MS<br />
OP42: Patient’s and Provider’s Perception of Asthma Care<br />
from a Statewide RCT for an Asthma Shared Decision<br />
Making Dissemination Intervention<br />
Thomas Ludden, PhD; Madelyn Welch; Hazel Tapp, PhD<br />
OP43: Raising Awareness ... Starting the Conversation,<br />
Using Shared Decision Making to Treat Vulvovaginal<br />
Atrophy<br />
Rowena Dolor, MD; Paul Smith, MD; Kristine Schmit, MD<br />
OP44: Strategies for Dissemination of a State-wide <strong>PBRN</strong><br />
Project: Dissemination of Asthma Shared Decision Making<br />
by the North Carolina Network Consortium (NCNC)<br />
Madelyn Welch, BA; Tom Ludden, PhD; Chandler Gates, BS<br />
8
Tuesday, July 12<br />
JULY 11, 20<strong>16</strong><br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Room: Old Georgetown<br />
OP45: Can CVD Risk Score be Generated from Electronic<br />
Health Records?<br />
Jonathan N. Tobin, PhD; Subrina Farah, MS;<br />
Stephen Williams, MD<br />
OP46: Diabetic Retinopathy Detection in Rural Primary<br />
Care Addressing Community Access Needs Using<br />
Advanced Technology in the West Virginia <strong>PBRN</strong><br />
Stacey Whanger, MPH; Adam Baus, MPH, PhD;<br />
Ronald Gross, MD<br />
OP47: Implementing Permanent Data Collection<br />
Infrastructure for <strong>PBRN</strong> Research in Practice Settings: A<br />
Case Example In Los Angeles<br />
Lyndee Knox, PhD<br />
OP48: Integrating Public Health Data and Clinical Data to<br />
Inform Primary Care Physicians<br />
Sebastian Tong, MD, MPH; Alex Krist, MD, MPH;<br />
Winston Liaw, MD, MPH<br />
P37: Patient Experiences of Care - An Ethnographic Study<br />
of Behavioral Health in Jackson, Michigan<br />
Elizabeth Kaziunas, MS; Mark S. Ackerman, PhD;<br />
Michael Klinkman, MD, MS<br />
P38: Patient-Centered Research Priorities in a Pediatric<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong><br />
Sarah Brewer, MPA; Sean O’Leary, MD, MPH;<br />
Natalie Crump, MS<br />
P39: Personalized Prescribing in Primary Care<br />
Martin Dawes, MBBS, FRCGP, MD; Diana Dawes, MSc;<br />
Hagit Katzov-Eckert, PhD<br />
P40: Predictors of Care Management Needs in Primary<br />
Care: Results from a CaReNet Card Study<br />
Matthew Simpson, MD, MPH; Aimee English, MD;<br />
Jodi Summers Holtrop, PhD<br />
P41: Primary Care “Measures that Matter” to Front Line<br />
Clinicians<br />
Rebecca Etz, PhD; Marshall Brooks, PhD;<br />
Martha Gonzalez, BA<br />
Transitional Break u<br />
9:15-9:30 am<br />
P42: Provider Recommendation for Massage Card Study<br />
Diane Mastnardo, BS, LMT; Jeanmarie Rose, MPA<br />
9<br />
Poster Session II/<br />
Refreshment Break u 9:30-10:30 am<br />
Chesapeake Suite<br />
P31: Active Surveillance Adoption in a Diverse Populationbased<br />
Sample of Men with Low-risk Localized Prostate<br />
Cancer<br />
Jinping Xu, MD, MS; Elyse Reamer, BS; Cathryn Bock, PhD<br />
P32: Attending Physician/Resident Differences in Attitudes<br />
about Opioids and Chronic Pain<br />
Carissa van den Berk Clark, PhD, MSW;<br />
Matthew Witthaus, MD; Betsy Wan<br />
P33: Challenges to Engaging Providers in Research<br />
Teams: A Glance at Patient Volume<br />
Jacquelyn Favours, MPH, CHES; Alaina Boyer, PhD;<br />
Consuelo H. Wilkins MD, MSCI<br />
P34: Characterizing Barriers to CRC Screening with<br />
Colonoscopy in the Primary Care Safety Net<br />
Anne Gaglioti, MD; George Rust, MD<br />
P35: Development of the Cleveland Out-of-School<br />
Enrichment <strong>PBRN</strong>: An Innovative Adaptation of the<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> Model<br />
AnneMarie Grassi, PhD; Earl Pike; James J. Werner, PhD<br />
P36: Evolution of a <strong>PBRN</strong>: ‘Formal’ Research Training for<br />
Primary Care Practitioners Through an Interactive Selfdirected<br />
Online Course<br />
Tamara Carver, PhD; Justin Gagnon; Florence Tremblay, MD<br />
P43: Stakeholder Engagement to Understand Relevance of<br />
Virginia’s Opioid Use Epidemic to Primary Care Practices<br />
Sebastian Tong, MD, MPH; Paulette Kashiri, MPH;<br />
Alex Krist, MD, MPH<br />
P44: The Formation of BRAIN (Behavioral Research and<br />
Innovation Network), a Community Psychiatry Practice<br />
Based Research Network (<strong>PBRN</strong>)<br />
Kathleen A. Clegg, MD; Andrew Hunt, MD, MHA;<br />
Christina Delos Reyes, MD<br />
P45: The Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System (OARRS)<br />
Card Study<br />
Andrew Hunt, MD, MHA; Kathleen Clegg, MD;<br />
Maureen Riley-Behringer, PhD, MSSA<br />
P46: The Quality of Life of Children Under Chiropractic<br />
Care in a Practice-based Research Network: The Use of<br />
the PROMIS-25<br />
Joel Alcantara, BSc, DC; Jeanne Ohm, DC;<br />
Junjoe Alcantara, DC<br />
P47: The Quebec Practice-based Research Network: A<br />
Portrait of Service Users and their Requests<br />
Lilianne Bordeleau, MA; Isabelle Samson, MD;<br />
Vanessa Serrano, MD<br />
P48: The Reach of Practice-based Research Networks:<br />
ORPRN’s “Four Pillars Model”<br />
Lyle J. Fagnan, MD; Anne King, MBA; Caitlin Dickinson
P49: Use of Appreciative Inquiry to Identify Themes in<br />
Success Stories of Practice Transformation<br />
Tristen Hall, MPH; Linda Zittleman, MSPH;<br />
Jack Westfall, MD, MPH<br />
P50: Using Consolidated-Clinical Document Architecture<br />
(C-CDA) for <strong>PBRN</strong> Quality Reporting<br />
Cara Litvin, MD, MS; Mark Daniels, PMP, FHIMSS;<br />
Vanessa Congdon, MSPH<br />
P51: Using the Consolidated Framework for<br />
Implementation Research to Assess <strong>PBRN</strong> Practice<br />
Pragmatic Trial Readiness<br />
Kim S. Kimminau, PhD; Jennifer Brull, MD; Robert Kraft, MD<br />
P52: Visit Complexity and Medical Errors in Family<br />
Medicine Clinics: An RRNeT Study<br />
Sandra K. Burge, PhD<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> INFRASTRUCTURE/NETWORK OPERATIONS<br />
Room: Cabinet/Judiciary<br />
WPF18: <strong>PBRN</strong>s Cultivate New Learning Community for<br />
AHRQ Health Assessment and Self-Management Support<br />
Recertification Activities (MOC Part IV, PA-QI, NP-CE)<br />
This panel discussion will include presentations and discussion<br />
from <strong>PBRN</strong> leaders about developing and maintaining <strong>PBRN</strong><br />
learning communities which provide integrated research and<br />
quality improvement activities that carry MOC/CE for their<br />
member clinicians.<br />
Developers: Rebecca Roper, AHRQ; Sari Siegel, PhD,<br />
WESTAT; Doug Fernald, MPH, SNOCAP<br />
Cultivators of Communities of Learning:<br />
Eric Peterson, EdM, AAPA; David Price, MD, ABMS<br />
Jonathon Tobin, PhD, CDN<br />
Transitional Break u<br />
10:30-10:45 am<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong> INFRASTRUCTURE/NETWORK OPERATIONS<br />
Room: Old Geogetown<br />
Workshop/Panels/Forums u 10:45 am-12:15 pm<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Room: Ambassador/Diplomat<br />
WPF11: Using Electronic Health Record Data and Health<br />
Information Technology to Support Research in <strong>PBRN</strong>s<br />
This session will offer real-world examples of how electronic<br />
health records (EHRs) and health information technology (HIT)<br />
can be leveraged to support large and small scale research in<br />
<strong>PBRN</strong>s, with a focus on sharing lessons learned and building<br />
capacity for and cooperation around EHR-based research.<br />
Laura-Mae Baldwin, MD, MPH; Alex Fiks, MD;<br />
Alex Krist, MD, MPH<br />
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT<br />
Room: Congressional<br />
WPF15: Enacting Mixed Methods Research in Primary<br />
Care: the Critical Importance of Stakeholder Engagement<br />
WPF19: The Evolution of <strong>PBRN</strong>s: Creating a Framework to<br />
be Responsive and Relevant to Practices and Community<br />
Stakeholders<br />
During this session, participants will:<br />
• Discuss how an organizing framework could help<br />
communities understand your <strong>PBRN</strong>’s priorities, aid in<br />
practice recruitment, and uncover areas for project<br />
development.<br />
• Learn how ORPRN evolved from primarily focusing on<br />
research coordination to recruitment and technical<br />
assistance to meet medical home and quality<br />
standards, and created the “Four Pillars Model.”<br />
• Reflect and share your <strong>PBRN</strong>’s priorities and its<br />
organizational framework.<br />
Caitlin Dickinson, MPH; Maggie McLain McDonnell, MPH;<br />
Lyle J. Fagnan, MD<br />
Networking Luncheon u<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
12:15 -1:00 pm<br />
In practice based research, the dynamic between context,<br />
intervention, implementation process, and sustainability is<br />
crucial for project design and evaluation. Practice-based<br />
research is also increasingly engaging stakeholders and<br />
negotiation of diverse perspectives and agendas. In this<br />
workshop we will explore participants’ experiences in their<br />
contexts in past or planned work to learn from each other about<br />
effective strategies that have been employed in stakeholder<br />
engagement.<br />
Milton Eder, PhD; Thea Luig, PhD;<br />
Denise L. Campbell-Scherer, MD, PHD, FCFP<br />
10
Tuesday, July 12<br />
Plenary Presentation III u<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
1:00-2:00 pm<br />
Special Presentation u<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
2:00-2:30 pm<br />
AHRQ’s EvidenceNOW: Implementation at the<br />
Intersection of Quality Improvement and Research<br />
EvidenceNOW: Advancing Heart Health in Primary Care is<br />
one of the largest research investments ever from the Agency<br />
for Healthcare Research and Quality. This three-year initiative<br />
is studying how external quality improvement support can both<br />
increase the dissemination and implementation of PCOR<br />
evidence in small- and medium-sized primary care practices<br />
and build practice capacity for understanding and using PCOR<br />
evidence in the future. Equally importantly, this work will help<br />
over 1500 primary care practices across the U.S. use the latest<br />
evidence to improve the heart health of millions of Americans.<br />
The initiative aligns with DHHS’s Million Hearts, a national<br />
effort to prevent 1 million heart attacks and strokes by 2017.<br />
This presentation will provide an overview of the initiative and<br />
an update of its progress since its launch in 2015. It will focus<br />
on the opportunities and challenges of blending quality<br />
improvement and research in a federal initiative.<br />
Learning Objectives:<br />
• Participants will be able to describe the overarching<br />
goals of AHRQ’s EvidenceNOW initiative and identify<br />
specific outcome measures associated with each goal.<br />
• Participants will be able to identify and differentiate<br />
design elements of the EvidenceNOW initiative that<br />
relate to implementation of quality improvement<br />
strategies and research activities.<br />
• Participants will be able to identify at least three early<br />
lessons learned from the first year of EvidenceNOW<br />
and discuss their relevance to primary care practice<br />
based research and quality improvement.<br />
Daring & Dangerous Ideas<br />
The Daring and Dangerous Ideas session will offer presenters<br />
the opportunity to share their daring or dangerous <strong>PBRN</strong><br />
research or primary care clinical idea. The session will be fast<br />
paced and interactive with the audience. Each presenter will<br />
have 10 minutes to present their idea followed by 5 minutes of<br />
Q&A giving the audience the opportunity to challenge the<br />
speakers.<br />
DI1: Smart Glass Technology Changes Paradigm of<br />
Healthcare Delivery<br />
R. Brent Wright, MD, MMM; Mo Mai, MD; Eric Fisher, MD<br />
DI2: We Should Measure and Reduce “Work After Work”<br />
(WAW)<br />
John W. Beasley, MD; Brian Arndt, MD;<br />
Wen-Jan Tuan, MS, MPH<br />
Awards/Announcements u 2:30-3:00 pm<br />
Regency Ballroom<br />
Adjournment u 3:00 pm<br />
David Meyers, MD<br />
Chief Medical Officer<br />
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality<br />
11
Conference Information<br />
12
Conference Information<br />
Dine Around Groups<br />
For those of you who haven’t heard of the “Dine Around”<br />
dinner, it’s a casual dining experience with fellow conference<br />
attendees who want to enjoy a nice meal and interesting<br />
conversation. Sharing a meal with new friends is always a<br />
highlight of the conference!<br />
Dine Around options are offered on Monday night. Please stop<br />
by the conference registration desk to see the list of<br />
restaurants available for each Dine Around and to sign-up for a<br />
Dine Around group. Each reservation for a given restaurant will<br />
be available for up to eight individuals. Participants will meet in<br />
the lobby at 6:45 pm Monday night, reservations will be for<br />
6:00 pm. The group will go to the restaurant and enjoy an<br />
evening of fun and good food. The restaurants will be within<br />
easy walking distance.<br />
Dine Around attendees will be responsible to pay for their own<br />
meal, drinks, and associated tip. The Dine Arounds are offered<br />
to the conference attendees as yet another way to help you<br />
make the most of your conference and connect with your<br />
colleagues.<br />
Continuing Education Credits<br />
This activity has been submitted for review by the American<br />
Academy of Family Physicians.<br />
Complete CME information will be available online at<br />
www.napcrg.org/pbrn in July. For other credit, NAPCRG will<br />
assist individuals by providing information needed to the extent<br />
possible.<br />
Evaluations<br />
NAPCRG offers session evaluations online in order to minimize<br />
our impact on the environment and be as green as possible.<br />
You can complete your session evaluations right on your<br />
smartphone or laptop through the mobile application or on the<br />
NAPCRG <strong>web</strong>site. To complete an evaluation on the mobile<br />
app see the next page; to complete an evaluation on the<br />
<strong>web</strong>site visit www.napcrg.org and click on “Complete Session<br />
Evaluation” link. Enter the session code found next to each<br />
presentation title in the program book and complete the<br />
evaluation.<br />
A final evaluation of the overall conference will be distributed at<br />
the end of the conference for completion onsite, and a link will<br />
be sent to you immediately after the conference if you prefer to<br />
complete your evaluation online. Thank you for providing us<br />
your feedback to facilitate future <strong>PBRN</strong> conference planning.<br />
Co-Sponsors<br />
Funding for this conference was made possible [in part] by<br />
grant 1R13HS022371-03 from the Agency for Healthcare<br />
Research and Quality (AHRQ). The views expressed in written<br />
conference materials or publications and by speakers and<br />
moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the<br />
Department of Health and Human Services; nor does mention<br />
of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply<br />
endorsement by the U.S. Government.<br />
Thank you to the following organizations for co-sponsoring this<br />
program with in-kind donations of marketing efforts.<br />
13 14
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